What can I say
Thanks for everything love.
1000 dreams, 500 distroes, 65 squared meters, 20 years mortgage, 6 rooms, 3 PCs, one geek...
Saturday, 29 August 2009
Friday, 14 August 2009
Moroccan Mint tea
Many times asked and terribly late here is the holy recipe of the most marvelous moroccan Tea, which was taught to me by a Moroccan Tea master, owner of an internet point.
So what? You think it is so easy to find a Moroccan mountain-living Hermit in the middle of Brussels?
You funny guys you.
Ingredients:
Some fresh mint
Two soup spoon of Gunpowder Tea
8/10 soup spoons of sugar (Not a joke, read on and I'll explain)
You are goint to need a metallic teapot, a wooden spoon or stick a glass and, if you like, some rose or orange water.
Execution:
- Boil a cup of water and pour it in the teapot
- Start boiling up enough water to fill the teapot and a bit more (you'll need it )
- While water boils clean the leaves and separate them from the stems.
- When water is boiling, empty the teapot and pour two full spoons of tea in the teapot.
- Pour a bit of water on the leaves rinse and pour out the Tea
This operation is needed to open the leaves and gets the tea powder out of the teapot so that your tea is clear.
Repeat two or three times
- Pour sugar.
The obscene quantity I told you has a practical reason and a personal reason.
The practical reason is that the tea will sit in the teapot all the time you're drinking it, thus getting bitter.
Sugar will cover this.
Personal reason is that this is a dessert and as such has to BE sweet.
This quantity is for about a liter water, but you will have to go for try and fail on your teapot till you find the right quantity.
- Add mint
- Pour water and let brew for 5 minutes.
- Stir with the wooden stick or spoon to break the sugar on the bottom of the teapot, then pour some Tea in a glass and back in the teapot.
- Repeat a couple of times till you're sure the sugar and Tea are well mixed together
Friday, 7 August 2009
Monday, 3 August 2009
Alone again...
They left this morning.
I should be used to it anyway, since I left home 18 years ago and since then this ritual of leaving and visiting repeated itself all over the years.
I should be, but I cannot get used to the night before, were time drags on and on, slow as a snail and in which you feel like you were wasting each second of it instead of doing something wonderful of it.
And I know I should be, but I cannot get used to the morning of the departure with our last breakfast together, the clock ticking and those embarassed silences that already feel like "goodbye" in which you do not know what to say at all.
And I cannot get used to that car that becomes smaller and smaller , my mother winking inside and to the final moment in which it turns around the street corner and is gone from my daily life.
And I cannot get used to going back inside and look around , seeing all the changes, as small or as large they can be, from the tiles in the kitchen and Boiler room to the decoration my mom made in the bathroom.
Or the little helper that keeps me company in the kitchen.
Sunday, 2 August 2009
Migration season (part two)
(continues)
What can be more beautiful than coming home after a hard day's work (solving some twit's PC problem) and finding your father that just finished building a concrete slab and awaits you to cover it with tiles?
A million different answers crosses my mind, but none of them happened, thus I went to change and started cutting.
Well, it's not a big deal...
True enough it is a small surface to cover, that said it has a higher ridge and a triangular section that made us sweat a lot ( never something easy in my kitchen, NEVER).
So we had to go around chiseling using some wielders and, finally, the stone grinder.
Height of the platform wasn't naturally standard so we had to dissect a tile in small rectangular sections to cover the raw concrete border.
Whenever (if-ever?) we start mass producing laser blades I have already a possible use for it.
Three hours later here is the result ^_^
Next stop the furniture under the stone counter...
Things are about to turn nasty...
What can be more beautiful than coming home after a hard day's work (solving some twit's PC problem) and finding your father that just finished building a concrete slab and awaits you to cover it with tiles?
A million different answers crosses my mind, but none of them happened, thus I went to change and started cutting.
Well, it's not a big deal...
True enough it is a small surface to cover, that said it has a higher ridge and a triangular section that made us sweat a lot ( never something easy in my kitchen, NEVER).
So we had to go around chiseling using some wielders and, finally, the stone grinder.
Height of the platform wasn't naturally standard so we had to dissect a tile in small rectangular sections to cover the raw concrete border.
Whenever (if-ever?) we start mass producing laser blades I have already a possible use for it.
Three hours later here is the result ^_^
Next stop the furniture under the stone counter...
Things are about to turn nasty...
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